aha! But an FG of 1.050 will be very, very sweet: that is more than 1 lb of sugar in every gallon of liquid. That's equivalent to about 108 teaspoons of sugar in 8 pints. Or about 7 teaspoons of sugar in every cup (8 fl oz) of coffee . See what I mean by "sweet"? Your mead, your tastebuds… but most experienced wine makers on this forum would allow the yeast to ferment the wine or mead bone dry (1.000 or lower), stabilize the wine by adding k-meta and k-sorbate and then bench test to see how much they want to back sweeten the wine. How much added sweetness they add will depend on a number of factors, including their own personal preferences, but it will also involve the acidity of the wine, the strength of the fruit flavors in the wine, the amount of alcohol in the wine; the viscosity of the wine etc. You might find that a final gravity of about 1.010- 1.015 is sweet enough for a table wine and a higher gravity is better for a dessert wine (with a higher ABV)